Personally, I am still using my Google Apps account for business email since I signed up to it when the service was still free. With that being said, I am noticing the "yourname@gmail.com on behalf of yourname@yourdomain.com," since I am still using the old free version of Google Apps. This is kind of annoying for business emails to clients as it's not as professional as the simple "yourname@yourdomain.com"

At work our employer has set up our company emails with a computer and networking business here in town and they transferred us over from Google Apps to use Outlook and POP settings. The networking business informed us that POP is better than IMAP (for reasons I'm still not clear on), but I don't quite understand why that is? Anyways, the emails are working flawlessly which is great, however, the syncing is still a bit old fashioned: when I receive an email on my Mac, it won't sync to my iPhone and vice versa. It seems to be a limitation of POP email, I have to download them twice and mark them as "read" twice on both my workstation and mobile device. With IMAP email it syncs them across all devices and shows the reply to on them as well. It is just a bit less clunky from my experience using Google Apps.

From the Lifehacker article it sounds like Outlook is planning to support IMAP in the future. Does anybody know when this has already happened? And is Outlook indeed the best free alternative to setting up free business emails these days? I am rather surprised that setting up business email still a bit of a tricky endevour to do these days - I mean, where do the costs come into play? They are giving away free @live / @gmail domains, but then again I suppose it is free because it is a form of advertising they get with those emails too.

Personally, I am still using my Google Apps account for business email since I signed up to it when the service was still free. With that being said, I am noticing the "yourname@gmail.com on behalf of yourname@yourdomain.com," since I am still using the old free version of Google Apps. This is kind of annoying for business emails to clients as it's not as professional as the simple "yourname@yourdomain.com"

At work our employer has set up our company emails with a computer and networking business here in town and they transferred us over from Google Apps to use Outlook and POP settings. The networking business informed us that POP is better than IMAP (for reasons I'm still not clear on), but I don't quite understand why that is? Anyways, the emails are working flawlessly which is great, however, the syncing is still a bit old fashioned: when I receive an email on my Mac, it won't sync to my iPhone and vice versa. It seems to be a limitation of POP email, I have to download them twice and mark them as "read" twice on both my workstation and mobile device. With IMAP email it syncs them across all devices and shows the reply to on them as well. It is just a bit less clunky from my experience using Google Apps.

From the Lifehacker article it sounds like Outlook is planning to support IMAP in the future. Does anybody know when this has already happened? And is Outlook indeed the best free alternative to setting up free business emails these days? I am rather surprised that setting up business email still a bit of a tricky endevour to do these days - I mean, where do the costs come into play? They are giving away free @live / @gmail domains, but then again I suppose it is free because it is a form of advertising they get with those emails too.

Thoughts and opinions?Thanks!

It baffles me why any IT pro would say POP mail is better for any reason than IMAP. POP is one way communication from the server to your email client while IMAP is two way and changes on one device should populate to any other connected to that account. At any rate, to answer your question, Outlook.com or domains.live does not use IMAP and whether they will offer it in the future is up in the air. The reason is simple. IMAP and POP are both very old and outdated protocols. Microsoft is pushing their own development of ActiveSync which their service fully supports. ActiveSync and other similar protocols from competitors are the way of the future in regards to email, contacts, calendar, etc. you can use Outlook.com or or domains.live account with ActiveSync settings and all mail, contacts, and calendars will sync across all supported devices including Outlook 2013. Your user name, password and server address of m.hotmail.com should be all you need.